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Vocal vibrating effect
Answer for the clue "Vocal vibrating effect ", 7 letters:
tremolo
Alternative clues for the word tremolo
Word definitions for tremolo in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Note how in this case the tremolo creates an expectation of the forcefulness and dynamism which is to follow. ▪ See, for instance, how the expensive Floyd Rose tremolo systems have worked their way down to cheaper guitars. ▪ ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
In music, tremolo , or tremolando , is a trembling effect. There are two types of tremolo. The first is a rapid reiteration: of a single note , particularly used on bowed string instruments by rapidly moving the bow back and forth and plucked strings such ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. (music) a tremulous effect produced by rapid repetition of a single tone or rapid alternation of two tones vocal vibrato especially an excessive or poorly controlled one
Usage examples of tremolo.
Stigelli was also one of the same style of singers at that time and I heard them both in grand opera and there was never a tremolo in either of their voices but perfect art in messa di voce, Bel Canto singing.
Cygnans did, of course, but he did the best he could, first arpeggiating it, then alternating it in a rapid tremolo.
She put her hands to Ceis, popped off a harmonic that stung the ears even of the veteran rockers, and jerked up on the tremolo bar.
On the last verse he broke into a tremolo that soared above the music in a descant, embellished it with sly glissandos, rests and ritardandos, climbed ambitiously towards the highest and thinnest pitch of the instrument, and then fell back deliciously upon the sonorous middle range of the third and second strings.
The camera Had moved in for a closeup, the white teeth, tremolo of tongue, effortful throat, vast enunciations of the lips.
He produced three simple chords to accustom his fingers to the reduced space of a mandolin's fretboard, and then he cascaded down a scale at a rapid tremolo.
His head was bent over the long fretboard, eyes closed, as he produced ululating tremolos with a complicated bow.
He knew cradle songs and fishing songs, classical tunes and new compositions by Theodorakis, Xarhakos, Markopoulos, and Hadjidakis, and he executed all of them with perfect tremolos and extraordinary syncopated improvisations that were inclined to prevent his audience from dancing because it was even better to listen.
There were sudden, flashing tremolos at the beginning of bars, and places where the music hesitated without losing its tempo, or sustained the same speed despite appearing to halve or double it.
There were tremolos on the strings and ominous pronouncements by the trombones and trumpets… Violins… Then a repetition of the theme by cellos and woodwinds.